Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my diet and I grew up to be slim, perfectly healthy (just had complete blood work done!) and a Division 1 athlete. I’m actually getting McNuggets for lunch. Live a little.
Anonymous wrote:Okay I am not an anti junk food person. The McDonalds as a treat does not really bother me.
Bu5 twinkies and pepsi for a toddler? Nope. Nope. Nope.
You have to draw the line somewhere and it is way before twinkies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put your foot down and sternly tell her, she needs to feed him the healthy food he is used to, or you can't let her babysit any more.
I have 4 kids, all very picky eaters, and twins with severe allergies. I can tell you once they get the taste for sugar and junk food, it is almost impossible to get them back to a healthy diet. Sugar is like cocaine for little kids. The highs and lows affect their moods terribly.
I would get rid of all sugar and sweets in my house entirely, but my DH is like your mom and keeps bringing it in. Constant battle
I completely agree. Some might call me crazy, but we eat zero junk food in our house. That doesn't mean DC doesn't get snacks -- she gets yogurt melts, Annie's bunny grahams, things like that. but I always make sure her meals are balanced, with foods she enjoys from every food group.
I would have a serious problem if my daughter was eating mcdonald's and other junk food on a regular basis.
we're lucky to have the financial ability to afford to healthy food. to me, choosing to give our kids junk is neglecting basic parental responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put your foot down and sternly tell her, she needs to feed him the healthy food he is used to, or you can't let her babysit any more.
I have 4 kids, all very picky eaters, and twins with severe allergies. I can tell you once they get the taste for sugar and junk food, it is almost impossible to get them back to a healthy diet. Sugar is like cocaine for little kids. The highs and lows affect their moods terribly.
I would get rid of all sugar and sweets in my house entirely, but my DH is like your mom and keeps bringing it in. Constant battle
I completely agree. Some might call me crazy, but we eat zero junk food in our house. That doesn't mean DC doesn't get snacks -- she gets yogurt melts, Annie's bunny grahams, things like that. but I always make sure her meals are balanced, with foods she enjoys from every food group.
I would have a serious problem if my daughter was eating mcdonald's and other junk food on a regular basis.
we're lucky to have the financial ability to afford to healthy food. to me, choosing to give our kids junk is neglecting basic parental responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you paying her to watch your child? If she is essentially your employee, then you have every right to say what she can and can't do during that time.
If you don't pay her, then she is doing you a HUGE favor by providing you with childcare 2 days a week! Don't accept the favor, pay someone else to do it.
Very easy.
Op here. Yes, we are paying her, and she we pay MIL even though she rarely accepts payment. We often provide MIL with a spa day or a nice dinner when she refuses to take the pay or just uses it on DS. MIL is more understanding and agrees with our form of parenting. We are thinking of hiring a sitter ( DS will go into daycare in 2 months). We had to end this babysitting before when my mom thought it was okay to let him watch hours of tv at only 2 months old.
Anonymous wrote:Skip ahead- child is now 16 and has an "eating disorder" in which she will only eat junk. I am not making this up - mom says "at least she's getting calories"
This is my neighbor. I witness this weekly. I don't know how to hold my tongue any more. This girl is skin and bone, and for "dinner" ingests a Coke and a bubble tea. ! "at least she's getting calories"
Nope. I just use it as a teaching moment for my own DCs, who also witness this joyous scene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds like my diet and I grew up to be slim, perfectly healthy (just had complete blood work done!) and a Division 1 athlete. I’m actually getting McNuggets for lunch. Live a little.
I love you common sense. I really do.![]()
Just want to add, Grandma does what Grandma wants. We have no rules. Don't like it, find another crunchy to sit for you. Kids need pampering. You all sound like mean mothers denying your kids of life's greatest moments.
Anonymous wrote:Put your foot down and sternly tell her, she needs to feed him the healthy food he is used to, or you can't let her babysit any more.
I have 4 kids, all very picky eaters, and twins with severe allergies. I can tell you once they get the taste for sugar and junk food, it is almost impossible to get them back to a healthy diet. Sugar is like cocaine for little kids. The highs and lows affect their moods terribly.
I would get rid of all sugar and sweets in my house entirely, but my DH is like your mom and keeps bringing it in. Constant battle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you paying her to watch your child? If she is essentially your employee, then you have every right to say what she can and can't do during that time.
If you don't pay her, then she is doing you a HUGE favor by providing you with childcare 2 days a week! Don't accept the favor, pay someone else to do it.
Very easy.
Op here. Yes, we are paying her, and she we pay MIL even though she rarely accepts payment. We often provide MIL with a spa day or a nice dinner when she refuses to take the pay or just uses it on DS. MIL is more understanding and agrees with our form of parenting. We are thinking of hiring a sitter ( DS will go into daycare in 2 months). We had to end this babysitting before when my mom thought it was okay to let him watch hours of tv at only 2 months old.